“That’s all abortion was to me--a political issue. I didn’t understand how my work could inspire such hate.”
-Norma McCorvey, "Jane Roe"
Roe's Change Of Heart
Years after the ruling, Jane Roe came out as Norma McCorvey. She made public appearances and began to work abortion clinics. However, after many years a contradictory, Pro-Life group moved into the same building McCorvey worked at. Since both groups were stationed in the same building confrontation occurred often, and that’s what triggered McCorvey to question abortion (EndRoe). |
"I worked in several abortion facilities over the years. In fact, I even worked at two clinics at the same time, and they were all the same with respect to the condition of the facilities and that “counseling” the women receive.
One clinic where I worked in 1995 was typical: light fixtures and plaster falling from the ceiling; rat droppings over the sinks; backed up sinks; and blood splattered on the walls. But the most distressing room in the facility was the “parts room.
Aborted babies were stored here. There were dead babies and baby parts stacked like cord wood. Some of the babies made it into buckets and others did not... The stench was horrible. Plastic bags full of baby parts, little tiny hands and feet visible through the jars, frozen in blood. The abortion clinic’s personnel always referred to these dismembered babies as “tissue.”
-Norma McCorvey, "Jane Roe"
Affidavit of Norma McCorvey
"Thirty-three years ago, I came before the United States District Court Northern District of Texas Dallas Division as the Plaintiff “Jane Roe,” the young woman whose case legalized abortion in the United States, Roe v. Wade. At that time, I was an uninformed young woman. Today I am a fifty-five year old woman who knows the tragedy that arose from my unsuspecting acquiescence in allowing my life to be used to legalize abortion." (Jane Roe v. Henry Wade) |
". . . I realized that my case which legalized abortion on demand was the biggest mistake of my life." -Norma McCorvey (Virtue Media)
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